Squib: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{quote|31. I will not detonate Squibs.|from ''[http://www.ficwad.com/viewstory.php?sid=7318 35 More Things I Am Not Allowed To Do At Hogwarts],'' by Nightspore}}
{{quote|31. I will not detonate Squibs.|from ''[http://www.ficwad.com/viewstory.php?sid=7318 35 More Things I Am Not Allowed To Do At Hogwarts],'' by Nightspore}}


Small explosives used to simulate gunshot wounds in movies and TV. Usually paired with a "blood bag" -- which is exactly what it sounds like, a small plastic sac filled with a liquid that looks like blood -- to produce what supposedly looks like a "real" wound. According to most actors who've had to use them, ''they hurt.''
Small explosives used to simulate gunshot wounds in movies and TV. Usually paired with a "blood bag"—which is exactly what it sounds like, a small plastic sac filled with a liquid that looks like blood—to produce what supposedly looks like a "real" wound. According to most actors who've had to use them, ''they hurt.''


Like most pyrotechnics, squibs will not work if they get too wet. In addition to its literal meaning, the term "damp squib" is sometimes used as a metaphor for a setup that fails in execution.
Like most pyrotechnics, squibs will not work if they get too wet. In addition to its literal meaning, the term "damp squib" is sometimes used as a metaphor for a setup that fails in execution.

Revision as of 03:40, 14 June 2015

31. I will not detonate Squibs.

Small explosives used to simulate gunshot wounds in movies and TV. Usually paired with a "blood bag"—which is exactly what it sounds like, a small plastic sac filled with a liquid that looks like blood—to produce what supposedly looks like a "real" wound. According to most actors who've had to use them, they hurt.

Like most pyrotechnics, squibs will not work if they get too wet. In addition to its literal meaning, the term "damp squib" is sometimes used as a metaphor for a setup that fails in execution.

Not to be confused with:

  • Non-magical children of wizard parents in the Harry Potter universe, which are termed "squibs" in-world.
  • A Squab, which is a pigeon.
  • "Squib" also has a meaning as a verb, meaning to hit weakly. Most commonly heard in sports broadcasts, both American football (a purposely weaker kickoff in order to prevent the return team to set up its normal return and/or force someone other than its normal returner (usually someone bigger and slower than the normal returner) to field it, and baseball (a ball hit so softly that by the time it gets to any of the fielders, the batter is already at first base.)